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WHAT HAPPENED WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW WHAT’S AHEAD. NAICU HEA: 101 RESOURCES. President’s Checklist President’s Quick Guide www.HEA101.org , NAICU’s HEA 101 Web site Power Point Presentation: What Happened/What You Need to Know/What’s Ahead. Part I: History and Political Context.
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WHAT HAPPENED WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW WHAT’S AHEAD
NAICU HEA: 101 RESOURCES • President’s Checklist • President’s Quick Guide • www.HEA101.org, NAICU’s HEA 101 Web site • Power Point Presentation: What Happened/What You Need to Know/What’s Ahead
Part I: History and Political Context A Look at the Changing Political Environment for the 2008 Higher Education Act Reauthorization
HEA History • 1965-1972: Congress establishes student aid programs & HEA framework • Solving the access problem for low-income students in partnership with colleges and states through a series of federal grant, loan and work-study programs. • Keep federal government out of institutional oversight and choice • 1992: Congress sets up HEA framework for quality assurance (including accreditation standards) to stop “fly by night” schools.
1995-2008 Changes in Education Politics and Policy Focus • Education becomes important election issue • New generation of leaders in Congress • Business models highly valued by politicians • “What are we getting for our money?” • P-16 movement blurs lines between early childhood, K-12 and higher education • Both Rs and Ds replace contrasting philosophies of government with contrasting policy ideas
2002 No Child Left Behind • Reauthorization of ESEA of 1965 – K-12 parallel law to HEA • Focus on equalization of financial resources for the poor replaced by focus on student assessment • Federal government abandons partnership with educators in favor of federal direction • Same congressional players in charge of HEA reauthorization slated for the next year (2003)
Explosion of College Prices Household Income vs. Tuition, Fee, Room, and Board Charges (2006 Constant Dollars)
College Pricing – A Town Hall Issue • They understand “net price” • They understand the “value of the investment” and importance to global competitiveness • As federal budget shrinks, Congress has fought hard to increase student aid funding • FY 2008 Pell Grant Program will cost $16 B (more than allocations for 2 of 12 congressional subcommittees) for $4,731 maximum grant • Last year’s average tuition increase was $1,398 • Both Congress and American people feel they “can’t keep up”
Colleges Losing their “White Hat” • Cost • Scandals (presidential perks and student loans) • Leads to questions by parents and Congress: “What are we getting for our money?”
Two Axioms of Legislative Bodies • When there is no money, they regulate instead • Poets write poems; painters paint, legislators write laws
Key Issue for NAICU During HEA: Don’t Cross the Bright Line of Federal Control • College Pricing • Accreditation • Student Learning Outcomes • Student Loan Sunshine • Protecting Campus-based • Aid & LEAP • Preserving Pell (against front-loading, other ideas) • Student Loan Cuts (opportunities and risks) • Increased Loan Limits • Student Repayment Options • Transfer of Credit • Teacher Education Mandates • Articulation Agreements • Last Dollar • Reporting Requirements (file sharing, textbooks, emergency response, U-CAN, missing persons, fire safety, distance ed, drug & alcohol, etc.) • Integrity
It Could Have Been Worse: What Didn’t Happen • Institutional Autonomy • Accreditation • College Cost • Transfer of Credit • Articulation Agreements • Teacher Preparation • SURD • Student Loan Sunshine • Student Aid • Last Dollar • Reporting/Disclosure
Positive Gains in Federal Aid • Increases in Pell Grants with new guaranteed five -year revenue stream (increase of $490 in 2008-09 alone) • Preservation of all student aid programs, including state grants and campus-based aid • Creation of new grant programs (ACG, SMART, TEACH) • Increase in undergraduate student loan limits and creation of GRAD PLUS • New repayment options for students with high debt to income; increased loan forgiveness; lower interest rates and elimination of 0 fees • Need analysis improvements
Key Issues Presidents Should Know Disclosures/Reporting Requirements Campus Crime Reporting Campus Emergency Procedures Consumer Information on College Navigator Disaggregation of Graduation Data Disciplinary Proceeding Disclosures Disclosures to Students & Prospective Students Drug and Alcohol Abuse Prevention Drug Violation Penalty Notice Fire Safety Lobbying Certification Missing Person Procedures Peer-to-Peer File Sharing Post-Graduate Information Teacher Preparation Report Cards Transfer of Credit Voter Registration Accreditation AccreditationCostCollege Costs Textbooks Student Aid and Admissions Leveraging Educational Assistance Partnership (LEAP) Student Aid Improvements Student Aid Simplification Student Loan Sunshine Provisions Veterans Readmission
Additional Issues • School as Lender • Default Rates • Title VI Grants • Graduate Education • Title II, Teacher Education Grants • Title III, B Historically Black Institutions • Title V, Hispanic Serving Institutions • Intellectual Diversity • Student Unit Record Data
NAICU HEA 101: Other Online Resources President's Checklist (What to do now)General HEA Info (Bill text, analysis, summary, and updates)Keyword Search (Using the keywords from the printed guide)New Grant Programs (Programs legislated but not yet funded)What's Being Studied (The next big ideas)FAQs and Discussion (Share with and learn from others)
Part IIIChanging the Conversation: NAICU Projects on the Future • College Cost Focus Groups • U-CAN: Comparisons That Don’t Homogenize • Together We Can: Restoring the Access Partnership • Documenting the Costs of HEA Reporting • Campus Visits: Nothing Like It
On-line Resources:www.HEA101.org • Questions/Comments:hea101@naicu.edu • NAICU Web Site: • www.naicu.edu